Phoenix, Jan 12 : Attorneys in the trial surrounding the 2008 gruesome killing of a 
suburban Phoenix man painted opposing pictures of the victim in opening 
statements, with prosecutors describing him as a devout Mormon and a "good man," 
and the defense saying he was violent and abusive.
On trial in the case 
is 32-year-old Jodi Arias, who could become the fourth woman on Arizona's death 
row if convicted. She is accused of shooting Travis Alexander in the face, 
stabbing him 27 times and slitting his throat, then leaving him in a shower in 
his Mesa home in June 2008.
Alexander's roommates found his body, and 
Arias was arrested the following month at her parents' northern California 
home.
Prosecutors argue Arias was a jealous woman who brutally attacked 
Alexander, 30, after he tried to end their relationship.
"This is not a 
case of whodunit," Deputy Maricopa County Attorney Juan Martinez said in his 
opening statement. "The person who committed this killing sits in court today — 
Jodi Ann Arias."
Jennifer Willmott, an attorney for Arias, told jurors 
her client acted in self-defense after Alexander "lunged at Jodi in 
anger."
"Jodi's life was in danger. He knocked her to the ground in the 
bathroom where there was a struggle," Willmott said. "If she did not have to 
defend herself, she would not be here."
Martinez said Alexander was a 
motivational speaker and a devout Mormon, and that Arias "stuck a knife in his 
chest."
"She slit his throat as a reward for being a good man," Martinez 
said.
Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty in the case. The trial is 
expected to last until April.
Investigators said Arias provided several 
versions of what happened, beginning with denying that she was at the scene 
until authorities found her bloody handprint on the floor of the 
bathroom.
Arias later suggested two masked intruders attacked her and 
killed Alexander, and she didn't call police because she was scared.
Mesa 
police said Arias eventually changed her story again, claiming self-defense and 
telling detectives that Alexander got violent with her.
Alexander had 
told friends Arias had become too possessive and was acting like a stalker, so 
he ended their relationship to see other women. But phone and email records 
indicate the pair continued to carry on a sexual relationship, The Arizona 
Republic reported.
Mesa police detective Esteban Flores downplayed the 
stalker description, saying Alexander was inviting Arias to his home and the 
phone calls between them "were back and forth."
Arias' attorneys have 
said she was not the sexual instigator in the relationship and pointed to 
provocative photos Alexander had sent her.
According to court records 
filed by Arias' attorneys, Alexander persuaded her to come to his home on June 
4, 2008. They claim the couple had sex, then took provocative photographs of 
each other, one even showing Alexander posing naked in the shower. 
Authorities said a camera found in the washing machine at Alexander's 
home contained a memory card with the photos, including one taken minutes after 
Alexander posed naked showing his bloody body in the 
shower.
Ends
SA/EN
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Ariz. woman standing trial in death of boyfriend
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